Not only do they not play the same game, they all play by their individual rules.
mando ________________________________ From: William Conger <[email protected]> To: [email protected] Sent: Tue, January 18, 2011 4:57:06 PM Subject: Re: representation and its sgnification All players are still on the field but not all of them play the same game. Archaeology is a linear inquiry about what came first, what came next, and so on. It doesn't fit what JR advocates. Instead, let's think of it as a debris field or a vandalized archaeological site. wc ----- Original Message ---- From: Saul Ostrow <[email protected]> To: "[email protected]" <[email protected]> Sent: Tue, January 18, 2011 5:57:28 PM Subject: Re: representation and its sgnification I tried to suggest that, on the contrary, this inquiry points to the tensions and contradictions which at once sustain the dynamic of artistic creation and aesthetic efficiency and prevent it from ever fusing in one and the same community of sense. The archaeology of the aesthetic regime of art is not a matter of romantic nostalgia. Instead I think that it can help us to set up in a more accurate way the issue of what art can be and can do today. Jacques Rancihre June 2006
